The effects of stereotaxic injection of amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta1-42) into rat brain to induce white matter damage have been studied. Administration of 1 nmol Abeta1-42 into corpus callosum resulted in considerable damage to axons as evidenced by the loss of neurofilament-immunoreactive (NF-ir) fibers 6 h and 3 and 7 days post-injection. Significant damage was also evident to myelin (using Luxol fast blue myelin staining) and oligodendrocytes (using CC1 immunocytochemistry); in the latter case marked caspase-3 immunoreactivity was evident in oligodendrocytes. Additionally, the numbers of GFAP-ir astrocytes and OX-42/OX-6-ir microglia were markedly increased following Abeta1-42 injection. These results suggest that Abeta plays an important pathophysiological role in white matter damage and that inflammatory responses may contribute to Abeta-induced demyelination and oligodendrocyte injury in corpus callosum. Loss of function of cells in corpus callosum could provide a potential new model for the study of white matter damage in Alzheimer's disease.